Nice video. I plant 250,000 bulbs every fall in the northeast. We plant on a grand scale, meaning we plant the bulbs less than 2 inches apart (most home gardens suggest 4-6 inches apart). There’s a big festival celebrating our city’s Dutch heritage every spring. We even invite residents to come out and dig up bulbs to take home.
@@BURRiah haha that event is probably bringing a lot of traffic to this video, because all of a sudden we’ve found ourselves parents to at least 30 tulip bulbs each, which turns out to be a lot more than I thought 😂
@@tamaraallen4819 Two weeks away from magic. I put in “only” 900 last fall. I bring bouquets to the coffee shop. But only for the smiles I get from women. ❤️🤣
@@jr6999 No, I cheat some. Usually about 4 inches apart. I have 150 left to plant. To celebrate I decided to put in some daffodils too. The young man in the garden center sent me to aisle five. Hmm, as I got there I realized he thought I was going to plant light bulbs. Lol
Obviously I'm 16 months late to this video; however, if you add bone meal to your bed every fall and spring, you'll help your bulbs and they'll flower beautifully. Tulips need at least 12 weeks of cold in order to bloom. If you live in a hot zone like I do (9B), then you must either buy pre-chilled bulbs or dig them, wash them, and refrigerate them for 3+ months before planting again. Edited to add that I have phlox subulata planted in a berm. I love it. Nice video and well done.
I live in 9b. Im shocked to learn you have to dig them up and refrigerate before planting again. We do get enough cold months i think? I have neighbors that have tullips and dont do this but they seem to come up every year. Fascinated by your comment. Thanks
I love your display of tulips. So so beautiful!! You have taught me a lot in this video, and I am going to try to follow your advise for getting a full display like yours. I also love the flocks. Very pretty blue color. I want to try and plant these around my shed. Thanks again for sharing. I just had to subscribe. God Bless you and your family.
New subscriber. Great video. I love tulips. I’m in zone 9b Northern California. I plan to plant 600 bulbs in pots. Thank you for the idea of planting zinnias after my tulips die back. Your rock wall is so beautiful. God Bless you and your family 🙏🏾
Thank you for identifying the grape hyacinths! I have some i received as a gift but didn't know what they were called. They are lovely and easy to grow
So beautiful your arrangement of mixed tulips and the soft purple phlox, just love it. I know well where you live, so good for tulips and all sort of beautiful flowers. Thank you for sharing so much information and artistic garden.
It surprises me that people never mention that the really nice phase of tulip flowers doesn't last very long, and afterwards the plants slowly flop over and die off and look pretty terrible while they're doing so. This is particularly true because tulips are usually planted in really visible locations.
That doesn't matter in most areas because gardens are still sleeping when tulips are blooming and they're only waking up during the flopping phase and then everything else grows in and takes up the tulips space. It's not like it's taking anything away from your garden
Most gardeners don’t care 🤷🏿 much about that 😂. If you live in A northern state or Midwest ; after A long winter🥶; You’re extremely excited to see Gorgeous colors in your flower beds; hence why folks love planting Tulips 🌷💯
Zinnias are my favorite! I put them in summer when my tulips are done. I also planted some tulips bulbs today, along with crocus & muscari. The Muscari is purple so I planted it in front of these fiery orange tulips...I think the contrast will be nice in spring. Also the phlox is one of my favorites...just planted a bunch this year so hopefully will see a nice show next year
That sounds amazing! Honestly one of the hardest parts is selecting plants that work well and provide all year interest. I think Tulips + Zinnia are a great combo and the Monarch Butterflies agree. I think your garden will be amazing next spring!
Love your beautiful tulips and creeping phlox especially in the rock wall setting. The info you provided was very informative and makes me feel better after spending quite alot on bulbs this fall that I can replant them again next spring as you described.
Thank you so much! I am glad to share my experience with tulips! And yes you can defiantly replant them next year and its always fun to add a few new tulips to ensure an amazing display! Happy Gardening :)
You really don't have to pull them and replant them as long as you let the foilage die back and add bone meal. Now, if you want to add some fresh bulbs to the mix to be sure of a gorgeous display, go for it. When I lived in Illinois, I never dug mine up except about every 3rd year. They got their 3 month chill period!
Wow! So beautiful. I love tulip . I have planted for a while now. Yes you're right on. The smaller bed is natural like and your rock beds are stunning. Great information on the work you did in order to create such beautiful beds
Love how you have planted these along a rock wall! It mimics how they would grow in nature (mountains of the Middle East). If you want to extend the bloom season of your ground cover areas, you could also plant hardy Plumbago (leadwort). It has nice foliage that would contrast the fern texture of your phlox and has pretty cobalt blue flowers. It is summer to fall blooming. The best varieties of perennializing tulips are species, kaufmanniana, gregii, Fosteriana, and Darwin hybrids. Narcissus do really well perennializing.
Thank you Dawn! I was wondering which tulip varieties perennialized (sp?) best. You know I too thought about the tulips growing wild in the valleys of the Tian Shan mountains. It's a far cry but my little rock wall maybe reminds them a little bit of home :) I'll look for a place to plant some narcissus.
All this time I thought I was doing something wrong because of getting a lot of foliage and fewer and fewer tulips. Your video has given me renewed confidence and a new plan. I'll aspire to have a bank of tulips like yours. Thank you. I have had muscari for many years and have had the best performance from the Armeniacum.
Thats cool I will have to checkout the Armeniacum. I am glad I could help shed some light on the reason tulips stop returning. They are returning just much smaller :) and without flowers. I have found that I can save about 15% of last years tulips and replant them but I still need to add 85% new bulbs for amazing flower beds. Happy gardening!
WOW! Your tulip garden is beautiful! And even more beautiful that you got such a good deal at Costco! I have not had that problem with tulips not coming back as full. I am in Zone 4B and planted a cheap bag of tulips a few years back. They still come back every year...bigger, brighter, stronger...and of course, they have spread now. I read that some varieties do come back more reliable than others. Darwin hybrid tulips tend to return more reliably and with more vigor. I'm sure that must be what I have. That or Superman tulips! Ha! I agree with your assessment and tips though, but I would add that for better long-term results, look for Darwin's.
I have creeping phlox, muscari, white candy tuft, (which drapes down the rocks just like your phlox does in the video). Beautiful combination and great if you have rocky soil….which I do. Also have daffodils, tulips all kinds of hostas, ferns, coral bells, Lenten roses in my shadier areas. I have lots of anchor plants such as azaleas, rhododendrons,hydrangeas, dogwoods, fruit and nut trees and of course roses since my husband never promised me a rose 🌹 garden…I planted my own🌹! 🤭 I watch videos like yours and appreciate you sharing your tips and beautiful yard. I love gardening and transforming areas and I am currently working on two different areas that will be secret gardens. It has been a lot of back breaking work over the years and 2 years ago we got a tractor which was a game changer. Cleared a whole back area that had lots of stumps, blackberry bushes, weeds that were up to my neck. Then we leveled it (this area was at least a quarter acre) then we bought in so many loads of top soil and planted 30 arborvitae’s to outline the area. I have been digging up and dividing plants from the other areas of my yard with most of the plants I listed in the beginning. I also collect my own seeds. I am a plant addict and CZcams gardening is kinda like an alcoholic anonymous meeting for me…i stopped buying, started propagation, dividing collecting seeds and swapping with friends and neighbors. It’s an awesome support system 😊🌿🌹🌸🍀🌲🌻🌷🤭
You garden sounds AMAZING! I really like what you said about collecting seeds and dividing plants. These Tulips are the largest plant purchase I make by far. But I rarely go to the garden center much anymore, I started with one forget me not, now I have 50. I regularly cut bouquet of Zinnia and then rather than throw them out, I hang them to dry in the root cellar and the harvest all the seed in the fall and use that to replant my Zinnia every spring. Gardening is the study of life, art, and nature all rolled into one. You send like a kindred spirit, Thank you! :)
Thank you for the info. It's a little bit of work if you have a huge area. I just want to do a meadow effect. Plus a pretty container of purple and white. Thank you also for letting us know Costco has bulbs at a really good price. My journey will start in late October here in Ga.
Just found you. Fabulous tulips.....one can never have too many. I live in the Great Lakes and we are getting 6+ inches of snow today! Early April Fools joke!!! Great tips and video.
I agree with you, mixing them together is a beautiful array of color and flowers and I like that you have tips continually blooming instead of all dying at the same time.
Thanks for the tulip info. As for zinnias you mentioned, I've grown them for two years (the tall, "State Fair" version). They are lovely indeed, but you didn't mention that they are annuals. As I get older, it becomes more difficult to plant annuals, so I'm switching to perennials like coneflowers and such. The same is true of tulips... they need annual digging, sorting, cleaning, storing, and replanting. Love them, but so much work.
Even passer-bys say how beautiful ur flowers are and they are gorgeous. Thank you for sharing this!! I love it where did u buy ur phlox amd how big were they when u planted them
Make cages from 1” wide hard wire cloth to plant them in, especially if you have gophers and moles but if just squirrels then place some chicken wire over them until they begin to sprout (or leave it down).
In my area (South Jersey) the muscari tend to bloom in phase more with the daffodils. By the time the tulips start to show the muscari are usually past their prime. The rich blue of the muscari and yellow daffs make a great match.
Very industrious! Stunning show. I am coaxing an alternating planting of pink white and blue ground phlox. I think your mono colour of blue sets off your multi coloured tulips best.
Thank you! I went with blue because it was easy to find, but you pink white and blue sounds wonderful. I planted a few (10) white creeping phlox a few years ago but they haven't done nearly as well as the blue ones. Happy gardening!
@@postbeam8200 yes the blues seem to take off and keep longer than the other colours. I find blue overall does well in many perennials. Yet when it comes to the tall garden phlox, the whites which come later than the others in my garden last longest, right into the fall. Long live your garden!!😉
I love it 😍! I planted over 500 last year but spaced them 1-2" apart and wished I didn't... I'm digging them all up this week and starting over soon with more tulip bulbs on the way. I stick to the Darwin Hybrid. I try to get the ones I really love online but gosh dang, they were sold out by July 🙄
Thank you so much! :) I too was worried that Costco would sell out of tulips early so as soon as they showed up in August I bought a bunch and stored them in the basement to keep them cool. I honestly don't really pay much attention to the cultivar since price and variation in color and bloom period is my primary focus. A lot of professional gardeners (Keukenhof Gardens for example) consider Tulips and annual. I kinda think of Tulips as an annual with a 15% discount since about 15 percent of my tulips are large enough to replant from the previous year. I am going to try an experiment planting various sized bulbs starting at about ¾ inch across and going up to the 1.5 inch standard tulip to see what size of existing tulip is big enough to salvage and replant when I dig them up in the fall. Happy Gardening! 🌷
Yes! Honestly when I bought my home my entire garden was covered with them. Millions upon millions of those bulbs which are impossible to get rid of.It was like a horror show and I can’t bring myself to look at them anymore 😂
Hello I love your tulip garden, and more liked when hear you are going to dig them up and plant Zinnia's , what exactly I am looking for, I used to plant Zinnia's but this year I planted Tulips as well, all looks good however would like to know, when I can dig them out to plant Zinnia's. Thank you so much and will appreciated for your comments . Regards..
This was so helpful! and timely for me, as my tulips are starting to drop their petals. I moved from zone 5 to zone 4 and am still adjusting. I will lift for the first time as I have noticed that in two summers of leaving them in their planting spots in this zone, there has been a change in the flower size - fabulous in summer one, nice but not fab in summer two. Lifting will hopefully do the trick so that summer three is a good one for them. I also grow the species tulips, the low - original? - types, which I have never lifted and they seem to be fine. I would be interested to know if you 'feed' yours during the bloom period? Re your video - you are a good communicator (nice delivery pace and very clear) and it is easy to absorb the information you provide. Thank you!
Since you live in a colder zone, you don't really need to lift them as much as put bone meal scratched into the ground to feed the bulbs. If you lift them, then pick off the tiny bulbs and replant the bigger ones with bone meal. You could take a tray and plant the little ones to let them mature, if you wanted to go to the trouble of it.
Only a year late on viewing! Awesome design and advice. So, would you suggest I just keep adding a few tulips each year to keep it full and pretty? As a senior I can no longer do much digging and getting on my knees is only in my past now. You could make a nice living designing landscape. Very talented. Thank you Mary
Another trick if you don't mind a spring mix of flowers is to add a bunch of daffodils in your flower beds to help fill in the bare spots where the tulips don't bloom. Daffodils aren't nearly as vibrant as your tulips, but reliable for coming back every year, and there are some beautiful varieties to choose from now. I can only plant daffodils due to the dear pressure in my area, but they are very beautiful as well.
So true! Daffodils are so much easier than tulips! They naturalize wonderfully and are poisonous so deer won't eat them. My original plan was to use daffodils in fact one of my favorite poems is by Willam Wordsworth is inspired by daffodils. BUT... then I made the mistake of planting a small bed of Tulips and my wife fell in love with them. Since then Tulip Mania has taken over my home and alas all sense of reason is lost. So I dig up and replant tulips as well as spray an egg based deer repellent in the season to keep away those adorable bambi pests. But let that be a warning to others, go with daffodils they are easy, beautiful and to quote Wordsworth "dance with the daffodils". Once you go with tulips the tulip mania really sets in :)
@@knitchywa - You know, my sister-in-law suggested the same thing. The deer in my area are nuts. They just eat around the daffs. Maybe I have to really mix them together within the same bunch. I used to plant a bunch of daffs then a bunch of tulips in between. I just gave up, nothing seemed to work. I only have Daffodils now, but they still nip, I think it's mostly accidental.
Or you can plant the small botanical ones which are far more reliably perennial. They self seed too: T. sylvestris, turkestanica, urumiensis, tarda, polychroma etc...
I buy my bulbs at Costco too as they are really reasonable. I shop at different Costcos & search for the different varieties at that time. Darwin tulips seem to come back pretty well for me….I’m still researching Triumph ones.
so pretty! I'm sure you already know, but you don't have to buy more creeping phlox plants. You can divide the plants you have to make more plants. I have done it with mine--in a very quick sloppy way too--and it has worked wonderfully. For anyone reading: Just get a trowel and dig up a portion of your creeping phlox and plant the clump in the area where you want it. Super simple. Sometimes it may not bloom the year you do this or it may not bloom until it gets well established, but it will, just give it time. Keep it moist the first couple months.
Your absolutely right creeping phlox is not hard to divide. I tried that in the beginning but I found that the plant's took several years to grow large enough to start spreading. Sadly, I am just too impatient so I just buy the 1 gal size and plant new ones rather than divide. The good news I have yet to need to replace a single creeping phlox, the are a buy it once kinda plant for me. Occasionally I need to go back and fill in a bare spot where they didn't spread as I had hoped, but basically they are very reliable. And reliable plants are a gardeners best friend. Thank you for your suggestion!
Nice video. I plant 250,000 bulbs every fall in the northeast. We plant on a grand scale, meaning we plant the bulbs less than 2 inches apart (most home gardens suggest 4-6 inches apart). There’s a big festival celebrating our city’s Dutch heritage every spring. We even invite residents to come out and dig up bulbs to take home.
That’s so cool! 🎉
Albany!
I was going to say, Albany! I just participated in the tulip dig myself and the line was half a mile long at 9am sharp
@@angelonover5208 I was there!!!
@@BURRiah haha that event is probably bringing a lot of traffic to this video, because all of a sudden we’ve found ourselves parents to at least 30 tulip bulbs each, which turns out to be a lot more than I thought 😂
Wow thanks for this great info, including the fact that Costco bulbs are so cost effective and so beautiful!
I plant 1000 bulbs a year. I love an overcrowded bed.
Wow! That is a lot of bulbs!
@@tamaraallen4819 Two weeks away from magic. I put in “only” 900 last fall. I bring bouquets to the coffee shop. But only for the smiles I get from women. ❤️🤣
The groundhogs thank you
Are they all 6 inches apart? It’s my first year planting them .
@@jr6999 No, I cheat some. Usually about 4 inches apart. I have 150 left to plant. To celebrate I decided to put in some daffodils too. The young man in the garden center sent me to aisle five. Hmm, as I got there I realized he thought I was going to plant light bulbs. Lol
Obviously I'm 16 months late to this video; however, if you add bone meal to your bed every fall and spring, you'll help your bulbs and they'll flower beautifully. Tulips need at least 12 weeks of cold in order to bloom. If you live in a hot zone like I do (9B), then you must either buy pre-chilled bulbs or dig them, wash them, and refrigerate them for 3+ months before planting again. Edited to add that I have phlox subulata planted in a berm. I love it. Nice video and well done.
I live in 9b. Im shocked to learn you have to dig them up and refrigerate before planting again. We do get enough cold months i think? I have neighbors that have tullips and dont do this but they seem to come up every year. Fascinated by your comment. Thanks
Loving the colors and mixing the bags together is genuine!
Your tulips definitely don’t look disorganized. They looks amazing!
I really like the idea of mixing them up and letting nature take its course!
Thanks for an informative video. Liked the tip on digging up and sorting.
Muscari are one of my favorite bulb flowers!! I'm looking forward to seeing your bloom next spring.
Love the combination of flowers. Your garden looks awesome and the information in your video was helpful. Thanks!
Absolutely breathtaking tulip arrangements.
Your rock walls look great! Gorgeous flowers.
I love the crowded look..stunning
This is so pretty, and thanks for the advice trying to get ready for opening season.
Your tulip planting bed is beautiful! I think I will try your method.
I love your display of tulips. So so beautiful!! You have taught me a lot in this video, and I am going to try to follow your advise for getting a full display like yours. I also love the flocks. Very pretty blue color. I want to try and plant these around my shed. Thanks again for sharing. I just had to subscribe. God Bless you and your family.
Love it.
Love how you detail and not boring.
Great job!
Thanks so much!
This is GORGEOUS! Tulips are my favorite flower and this has inspired me so much.
Very lovely flowers! Thank you for sharing this video.
New subscriber. Great video. I love tulips. I’m in zone 9b Northern California. I plan to plant 600 bulbs in pots. Thank you for the idea of planting zinnias after my tulips die back. Your rock wall is so beautiful. God Bless you and your family 🙏🏾
Thank you so much for the explanation. It makes so much sense.
Those tulips are absolutely GORGEOUS! WOW
Thank you for identifying the grape hyacinths! I have some i received as a gift but didn't know what they were called. They are lovely and easy to grow
What a beautiful garden you have created for your community to enjoy too.
So beautiful ! How gorgeous your garden...
Absolutely beautiful!!
I love this tulip mix design......”gorgeous!”
Wow!! Absolutely beautiful!!😍😍😍👌🏽💐💐💐💐
Blessings for you , you are wonderful. I learn a lot from your tutorials.
So beautiful your arrangement of mixed tulips and the soft purple phlox, just love it. I know well where you live, so good for tulips and all sort of beautiful flowers.
Thank you for sharing so much information and artistic garden.
Gorgeous. I love it! Great information.
The tulip bed looks beautiful.
Beautiful colours and flower's nice graden wow👏
So informative, and such a nice flower bed - would love to see a follow ups!
It surprises me that people never mention that the really nice phase of tulip flowers doesn't last very long, and afterwards the plants slowly flop over and die off and look pretty terrible while they're doing so. This is particularly true because tulips are usually planted in really visible locations.
That doesn't matter in most areas because gardens are still sleeping when tulips are blooming and they're only waking up during the flopping phase and then everything else grows in and takes up the tulips space. It's not like it's taking anything away from your garden
I think they are worth it for the early spring color riot. By the time they are done summer flowers will be blooming
Most gardeners don’t care 🤷🏿 much about that 😂. If you live in A northern state or Midwest ; after A long winter🥶; You’re extremely excited to see Gorgeous colors in your flower beds; hence why folks love planting Tulips 🌷💯
You could plant the baby tulip bulbs in the phlox as well... Such a nice flower bed.. Great job!
Wow beautiful man congrats, thanks for sharing
Well explained! Thank you for the tips!
Wonderful, thorough information!!! Thank you for taking the time to share and show examples. Looking forward to more of your videos. God bless ❤️
❤amazing tulips show.wow😊
Totally enjoyed this video… thanks so much for the info…
So beautiful. Wow!
Amazing very helpful information
Your tulips look very nice…love the variety and different heights
Zinnias are my favorite! I put them in summer when my tulips are done. I also planted some tulips bulbs today, along with crocus & muscari. The Muscari is purple so I planted it in front of these fiery orange tulips...I think the contrast will be nice in spring.
Also the phlox is one of my favorites...just planted a bunch this year so hopefully will see a nice show next year
That sounds amazing! Honestly one of the hardest parts is selecting plants that work well and provide all year interest. I think Tulips + Zinnia are a great combo and the Monarch Butterflies agree. I think your garden will be amazing next spring!
Love your beautiful tulips and creeping phlox especially in the rock wall setting. The info you provided was very informative and makes me feel better after spending quite alot on bulbs this fall that I can replant them again next spring as you described.
Thank you so much! I am glad to share my experience with tulips! And yes you can defiantly replant them next year and its always fun to add a few new tulips to ensure an amazing display! Happy Gardening :)
The lovelia looks awesome as well
You really don't have to pull them and replant them as long as you let the foilage die back and add bone meal. Now, if you want to add some fresh bulbs to the mix to be sure of a gorgeous display, go for it. When I lived in Illinois, I never dug mine up except about every 3rd year. They got their 3 month chill period!
Beautifully stunning! :)
Love what you have done 👍
That's a great wall you have there with the tulips.
Wow! So beautiful. I love tulip . I have planted for a while now. Yes you're right on. The smaller bed is natural like and your rock beds are stunning. Great information on the work you did in order to create such beautiful beds
Thank you so much! 😊
Thanks 🙏.Gorgeous garden.👍😍
Love how you have planted these along a rock wall! It mimics how they would grow in nature (mountains of the Middle East). If you want to extend the bloom season of your ground cover areas, you could also plant hardy Plumbago (leadwort). It has nice foliage that would contrast the fern texture of your phlox and has pretty cobalt blue flowers. It is summer to fall blooming.
The best varieties of perennializing tulips are species, kaufmanniana, gregii, Fosteriana, and Darwin hybrids.
Narcissus do really well perennializing.
Thank you Dawn! I was wondering which tulip varieties perennialized (sp?) best. You know I too thought about the tulips growing wild in the valleys of the Tian Shan mountains. It's a far cry but my little rock wall maybe reminds them a little bit of home :) I'll look for a place to plant some narcissus.
Thank you for the info.
But isn't narcissus just the Latin name for daffodil...?
nice job. good to know how to organize and plant
Beautiful splash of colour.
Beautiful! We moved to Nova Scotia & have stone walls & will do the same thing.
I love the wall beautiful ❤️
It is absolutely gorgeous ❤
All this time I thought I was doing something wrong because of getting a lot of foliage and fewer and fewer tulips. Your video has given me renewed confidence and a new plan. I'll aspire to have a bank of tulips like yours. Thank you. I have had muscari for many years and have had the best performance from the Armeniacum.
Thats cool I will have to checkout the Armeniacum. I am glad I could help shed some light on the reason tulips stop returning. They are returning just much smaller :) and without flowers. I have found that I can save about 15% of last years tulips and replant them but I still need to add 85% new bulbs for amazing flower beds. Happy gardening!
I like the 'disorganized' look. Reminds me of wildflowers. :)
Love the videos! My own small batch of tulips just came up recently 😊
Lol I am so that neighbor that will interrupt your video to tell you I love the flowers. They are beautiful.
Thats the best part! It's wonderful how much joy a little color can bring after a cold winter and a difficult year of COVID.
Beautiful garden ❤
WOW! Your tulip garden is beautiful! And even more beautiful that you got such a good deal at Costco! I have not had that problem with tulips not coming back as full. I am in Zone 4B and planted a cheap bag of tulips a few years back. They still come back every year...bigger, brighter, stronger...and of course, they have spread now. I read that some varieties do come back more reliable than others. Darwin hybrid tulips tend to return more reliably and with more vigor. I'm sure that must be what I have. That or Superman tulips! Ha! I agree with your assessment and tips though, but I would add that for better long-term results, look for Darwin's.
I have creeping phlox, muscari, white candy tuft, (which drapes down the rocks just like your phlox does in the video). Beautiful combination and great if you have rocky soil….which I do.
Also have daffodils, tulips all kinds of hostas, ferns, coral bells, Lenten roses in my shadier areas. I have lots of anchor plants such as azaleas, rhododendrons,hydrangeas, dogwoods, fruit and nut trees and of course roses since my husband never promised me a rose 🌹 garden…I planted my own🌹! 🤭
I watch videos like yours and appreciate you sharing your tips and beautiful yard. I love gardening and transforming areas and I am currently working on two different areas that will be secret gardens. It has been a lot of back breaking work over the years and 2 years ago we got a tractor which was a game changer. Cleared a whole back area that had lots of stumps, blackberry bushes, weeds that were up to my neck. Then we leveled it (this area was at least a quarter acre) then we bought in so many loads of top soil and planted 30 arborvitae’s to outline the area. I have been digging up and dividing plants from the other areas of my yard with most of the plants I listed in the beginning. I also collect my own seeds. I am a plant addict and CZcams gardening is kinda like an alcoholic anonymous meeting for me…i stopped buying, started propagation, dividing collecting seeds and swapping with friends and neighbors. It’s an awesome support system 😊🌿🌹🌸🍀🌲🌻🌷🤭
You garden sounds AMAZING! I really like what you said about collecting seeds and dividing plants. These Tulips are the largest plant purchase I make by far. But I rarely go to the garden center much anymore, I started with one forget me not, now I have 50. I regularly cut bouquet of Zinnia and then rather than throw them out, I hang them to dry in the root cellar and the harvest all the seed in the fall and use that to replant my Zinnia every spring. Gardening is the study of life, art, and nature all rolled into one. You send like a kindred spirit, Thank you! :)
Yes, my name is Tricia,and I am a plantaholic😛. Reading your comments made my shovel nervous 😅🤣😂...
Thank you for the info. It's a little bit of work if you have a huge area. I just want to do a meadow effect. Plus a pretty container of purple and white. Thank you also for letting us know Costco has bulbs at a really good price. My journey will start in late October here in Ga.
Just found you. Fabulous tulips.....one can never have too many. I live in the Great Lakes and we are getting 6+ inches of snow today! Early April Fools joke!!! Great tips and video.
Your fadern is beautifully and well managed flowerrs in a pattern ❤
Very informative
Thanks so much
I agree with you, mixing them together is a beautiful array of color and flowers and I like that you have tips continually blooming instead of all dying at the same time.
What a gift to your neighborhood!
Looks amazing 😻
I love the whole set up!
GORGEOUS!
I LOVE the creeping phlox & mixed tulips!
Thanks for the tulip info. As for zinnias you mentioned, I've grown them for two years (the tall, "State Fair" version). They are lovely indeed, but you didn't mention that they are annuals. As I get older, it becomes more difficult to plant annuals, so I'm switching to perennials like coneflowers and such. The same is true of tulips... they need annual digging, sorting, cleaning, storing, and replanting. Love them, but so much work.
Very nice garden…❤
I actually like how you planted it.
Even passer-bys say how beautiful ur flowers are and they are gorgeous. Thank you for sharing this!! I love it where did u buy ur phlox amd how big were they when u planted them
You got a nice garden man
Beautiful work ! I live in the city and squirrels dig up almost anything I plant . . .
Make cages from 1” wide hard wire cloth to plant them in, especially if you have gophers and moles but if just squirrels then place some chicken wire over them until they begin to sprout (or leave it down).
In my area (South Jersey) the muscari tend to bloom in phase more with the daffodils. By the time the tulips start to show the muscari are usually past their prime.
The rich blue of the muscari and yellow daffs make a great match.
Amazing and beautiful def will do that for next year.
Very industrious! Stunning show. I am coaxing an alternating planting of pink white and blue ground phlox.
I think your mono colour of blue sets off your multi coloured tulips best.
Thank you! I went with blue because it was easy to find, but you pink white and blue sounds wonderful. I planted a few (10) white creeping phlox a few years ago but they haven't done nearly as well as the blue ones. Happy gardening!
@@postbeam8200 yes the blues seem to take off and keep longer than the other colours. I find blue overall does well in many perennials. Yet when it comes to the tall garden phlox, the whites which come later than the others in my garden last longest, right into the fall. Long live your garden!!😉
Beautiful 💜🌺
that's Beautiful!
I love it 😍! I planted over 500 last year but spaced them 1-2" apart and wished I didn't... I'm digging them all up this week and starting over soon with more tulip bulbs on the way. I stick to the Darwin Hybrid. I try to get the ones I really love online but gosh dang, they were sold out by July 🙄
Thank you so much! :) I too was worried that Costco would sell out of tulips early so as soon as they showed up in August I bought a bunch and stored them in the basement to keep them cool. I honestly don't really pay much attention to the cultivar since price and variation in color and bloom period is my primary focus. A lot of professional gardeners (Keukenhof Gardens for example) consider Tulips and annual. I kinda think of Tulips as an annual with a 15% discount since about 15 percent of my tulips are large enough to replant from the previous year. I am going to try an experiment planting various sized bulbs starting at about ¾ inch across and going up to the 1.5 inch standard tulip to see what size of existing tulip is big enough to salvage and replant when I dig them up in the fall. Happy Gardening! 🌷
Which Darwin's do you love? This will be my first year focusing on true perennial bulbs.🌷
Thank you for sharing
Beautiful ! The grape hyacinth are very evasive. Once you plant them, they are very hard to get rid of.
Yes! Honestly when I bought my home my entire garden was covered with them. Millions upon millions of those bulbs which are impossible to get rid of.It was like a horror show and I can’t bring myself to look at them anymore 😂
Hello I love your tulip garden, and more liked when hear you are going to dig them up and plant Zinnia's , what exactly I am looking for, I used to plant Zinnia's but this year I planted Tulips as well, all looks good however would like to know, when I can dig them out to plant Zinnia's. Thank you so much and will appreciated for your comments . Regards..
This was so helpful! and timely for me, as my tulips are starting to drop their petals. I moved from zone 5 to zone 4 and am still adjusting. I will lift for the first time as I have noticed that in two summers of leaving them in their planting spots in this zone, there has been a change in the flower size - fabulous in summer one, nice but not fab in summer two. Lifting will hopefully do the trick so that summer three is a good one for them. I also grow the species tulips, the low - original? - types, which I have never lifted and they seem to be fine. I would be interested to know if you 'feed' yours during the bloom period?
Re your video - you are a good communicator (nice delivery pace and very clear) and it is easy to absorb the information you provide.
Thank you!
Since you live in a colder zone, you don't really need to lift them as much as put bone meal scratched into the ground to feed the bulbs. If you lift them, then pick off the tiny bulbs and replant the bigger ones with bone meal. You could take a tray and plant the little ones to let them mature, if you wanted to go to the trouble of it.
Only a year late on viewing! Awesome design and advice.
So, would you suggest I just keep adding a few tulips each year to keep it full and pretty? As a senior I can no longer do much digging and getting on my knees is only in my past now. You could make a nice living designing landscape. Very talented. Thank you
Mary
Another trick if you don't mind a spring mix of flowers is to add a bunch of daffodils in your flower beds to help fill in the bare spots where the tulips don't bloom. Daffodils aren't nearly as vibrant as your tulips, but reliable for coming back every year, and there are some beautiful varieties to choose from now. I can only plant daffodils due to the dear pressure in my area, but they are very beautiful as well.
So true! Daffodils are so much easier than tulips! They naturalize wonderfully and are poisonous so deer won't eat them. My original plan was to use daffodils in fact one of my favorite poems is by Willam Wordsworth is inspired by daffodils. BUT... then I made the mistake of planting a small bed of Tulips and my wife fell in love with them. Since then Tulip Mania has taken over my home and alas all sense of reason is lost. So I dig up and replant tulips as well as spray an egg based deer repellent in the season to keep away those adorable bambi pests. But let that be a warning to others, go with daffodils they are easy, beautiful and to quote Wordsworth "dance with the daffodils". Once you go with tulips the tulip mania really sets in :)
@@postbeam8200 did you dig up and divide bulbs yet?
@@livingthedreamoutdoors7845 Not yet :) I did just buy a bunch of new bulbs to add in at Costco.
If you mix daffodils in with the tulips it will help deter the Deer
@@knitchywa - You know, my sister-in-law suggested the same thing. The deer in my area are nuts. They just eat around the daffs. Maybe I have to really mix them together within the same bunch. I used to plant a bunch of daffs then a bunch of tulips in between. I just gave up, nothing seemed to work. I only have Daffodils now, but they still nip, I think it's mostly accidental.
Nice! Love
Or you can plant the small botanical ones which are far more reliably perennial. They self seed too: T. sylvestris, turkestanica, urumiensis, tarda, polychroma etc...
Thanks for the perennial names!
Beautiful
Gorgeous, bravo
I buy my bulbs at Costco too as they are really reasonable. I shop at different Costcos & search for the different varieties at that time. Darwin tulips seem to come back pretty well for me….I’m still researching Triumph ones.
Dude if you woukd focus on your gardening your channel would grow like crazy. Great info and awesome display of tulips!
They are beautiful
🍃🌷🌷🌷Gorgeous!🌷🌷🌷🍃
so pretty! I'm sure you already know, but you don't have to buy more creeping phlox plants. You can divide the plants you have to make more plants. I have done it with mine--in a very quick sloppy way too--and it has worked wonderfully. For anyone reading: Just get a trowel and dig up a portion of your creeping phlox and plant the clump in the area where you want it. Super simple. Sometimes it may not bloom the year you do this or it may not bloom until it gets well established, but it will, just give it time. Keep it moist the first couple months.
Your absolutely right creeping phlox is not hard to divide. I tried that in the beginning but I found that the plant's took several years to grow large enough to start spreading. Sadly, I am just too impatient so I just buy the 1 gal size and plant new ones rather than divide. The good news I have yet to need to replace a single creeping phlox, the are a buy it once kinda plant for me. Occasionally I need to go back and fill in a bare spot where they didn't spread as I had hoped, but basically they are very reliable. And reliable plants are a gardeners best friend. Thank you for your suggestion!
@@postbeam8200 Exactly! If you want instant creeping effect then totally go for buying new plants. Looks beautiful :)
I had a question on your phlox. How many plants did you start with and how long does it take to become dense and established? Thanks!